Bayonet Damascus Steel
About Bayonet Damascus Steel
The ★ Bayonet Damascus Steel applies a layered damascus pattern to the blade, creating flowing gray swirls and ringed lines across the metal while keeping the classic bayonet profile intact. Among Bayonet finishes in CS2, it stands out for its understated forged-steel look rather than painted color schemes or graphic artwork.
Release & Source
The Bayonet Damascus Steel can be found in the Chroma Case, Chroma 2 Case, and Chroma 3 Case. The Bayonet Damascus Steel is part of the Damascus Steel family.
Float Range & Wear
The Bayonet Damascus Steel is available in all conditions, from Factory New to Battle-Scarred. The higher the float value, the more scratches and wear will be visible on the skin.
The Bayonet Damascus Steel is a Covert-tier skin with an estimated drop chance of ~0.64%, making it one of the rarest Bayonet skins in CS2.
Popularity
Community Rating
Frequently Asked Questions
Driver Gloves Black Tie match the knife’s black handle and clean silver blade without adding extra color. Sport Gloves Arid give it a military tan-and-steel loadout look, while Specialist Gloves Mogul add cool grey-blue tones that still fit the Damascus finish. If you want a darker pairing, Moto Gloves Smoke Out also work well with the blade’s monochrome palette.
The silver-grey finish pairs best with neutral or industrial weapon skins such as AK-47 Slate, M4A1-S Printstream, USP-S Stainless, and Desert Eagle Printstream. For a more rugged loadout, pair it with Galil AR Stone Cold, MP7 Armor Core, or P250 Metallic DDPAT. Black, white, grey, and muted blue finishes usually match this knife better than bright reds or neon finishes.
Bayonet Damascus Steel uses a pattern template, but pattern differences are usually subtle compared with skins like Case Hardened or Fade. Most variation is in the swirled light-and-dark steel distribution across the blade rather than in any rare gem or high-tier pattern. Buyers usually choose this knife for the overall Damascus texture and cleaner examples rather than for named pattern rankings.
A Damascus Steel knife is usually worth considering if you want a neutral finish that fits many loadouts and does not depend on rare pattern hunting. On a Bayonet, the long blade makes the layered steel effect more visible than on smaller knives, which helps the finish stand out in-game. It is generally chosen for versatility and classic styling rather than for the premium attached to phase-based or rare-pattern knife finishes.

